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Dive into the research topics where Lisa Schurer Lambert is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa Schurer Lambert.


Psychological Methods | 2007

Methods for integrating moderation and mediation: a general analytical framework using moderated path analysis.

Jeffrey R. Edwards; Lisa Schurer Lambert

Studies that combine moderation and mediation are prevalent in basic and applied psychology research. Typically, these studies are framed in terms of moderated mediation or mediated moderation, both of which involve similar analytical approaches. Unfortunately, these approaches have important shortcomings that conceal the nature of the moderated and the mediated effects under investigation. This article presents a general analytical framework for combining moderation and mediation that integrates moderated regression analysis and path analysis. This framework clarifies how moderator variables influence the paths that constitute the direct, indirect, and total effects of mediated models. The authors empirically illustrate this framework and give step-by-step instructions for estimation and interpretation. They summarize the advantages of their framework over current approaches, explain how it subsumes moderated mediation and mediated moderation, and describe how it can accommodate additional moderator and mediator variables, curvilinear relationships, and structural equation models with latent variables.


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2006

The phenomenology of fit: linking the person and environment to the subjective experience of person-environment fit.

Jeffrey R. Edwards; Daniel M. Cable; Ian O. Williamson; Lisa Schurer Lambert; Abbie J. Shipp

The authors distinguished 3 approaches to the study of perceived person-environment fit (P-E fit): (a) atomistic, which examines perceptions of the person and environment as separate entities; (b) molecular, which concerns the perceived comparison between the person and environment; and (c) molar, which focuses on the perceived similarity, match, or fit between the person and environment. Distinctions among these approaches have fundamental implications for theory, measurement, and the subjective experience of P-E fit, yet research has treated these approaches as interchangeable. This study investigated the meaning and relationships among the atomistic, molecular, and molar approaches to fit and examined factors that influence the strength of these relationships. Results showed that the relationships among the approaches deviate markedly from the theoretical logic that links them together. Supplemental analyses indicated that molar fit overlaps with affect and molecular fit gives different weight to atomistic person and environment information depending on how the comparison is framed. These findings challenge fundamental assumptions underlying P-E fit theories and have important implications for future research.


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2008

Abusive Supervision and Subordinates' Organization Deviance

Bennett J. Tepper; Christine A. Henle; Lisa Schurer Lambert; Robert A. Giacalone; Michelle K. Duffy

The authors developed an integrated model of the relationships among abusive supervision, affective organizational commitment, norms toward organization deviance, and organization deviance and tested the framework in 2 studies: a 2-wave investigation of 243 supervised employees and a cross-sectional study of 247 employees organized into 68 work groups. Path analytic tests of mediated moderation provide support for the prediction that the mediated effect of abusive supervision on organization deviance (through affective commitment) is stronger when employees perceive that their coworkers are more approving of organization deviance (Study 1) and when coworkers perform more acts of organization deviance (Study 2).


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2016

Do similarities or differences between CEO leadership and organizational culture have a more positive effect on firm performance? A test of competing predictions.

Chad A. Hartnell; Angelo J. Kinicki; Lisa Schurer Lambert; Mel Fugate; Patricia Doyle Corner

This study examines the nature of the interaction between CEO leadership and organizational culture using 2 common metathemes (task and relationship) in leadership and culture research. Two perspectives, similarity and dissimilarity, offer competing predictions about the fit, or interaction, between leadership and culture and its predicted effect on firm performance. Predictions for the similarity perspective draw upon attribution theory and social identity theory of leadership, whereas predictions for the dissimilarity perspective are developed based upon insights from leadership contingency theories and the notion of substitutability. Hierarchical regression results from 114 CEOs and 324 top management team (TMT) members failed to support the similarity hypotheses but revealed broad support for the dissimilarity predictions. Findings suggest that culture can serve as a substitute for leadership when leadership behaviors are redundant with cultural values (i.e., they both share a task- or relationship-oriented focus). Findings also support leadership contingency theories indicating that CEO leadership is effective when it provides psychological and motivational resources lacking in the organizations culture. We discuss theoretical and practical implications and delineate directions for future research. (PsycINFO Database Record


Business Strategy and The Environment | 2000

… And not a drop to drink: an integrated model of ethics and strategic issue diagnosis

Lisa Schurer Lambert

Despite the strategic and competitive advantages possibly gained by developing sustainable water processes, many firms have not responded to the threat of impending water shortages. An integrated model of strategic issue diagnosis drawn from and extending previous models explains when managers will recognize a strategic issue and its ethical implications. When managers perceive that an issue (i) can be resolved, meaning that it is feasible, (ii) has implications for the organization that are important, meaning that it is urgent, and (iii) when significant harm is probable, meaning the issue has moral intensity, then managers are more likely to become committed to and exert effort to resolve the issue. Copyright


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2017

Publishing High Impact Methods Papers: Insights from ORM Editors

John Antonakis; Brian Boyd; Robert P. Gephart; Thomas Greckhamer; Adam W. Meade; Daniel A. Newman; Lisa Schurer Lambert; Anne D Smith; Louis Tay; Scott Tonidandel

AOM members have often received graduate training in how to apply research methods to their own research, but few members have been trained in how to develop contributions to the research methodolo...


Personnel Psychology | 2006

Procedural injustice, victim precipitation, and abusive supervision

Bennett J. Tepper; Michelle K. Duffy; Christine A. Henle; Lisa Schurer Lambert


Personnel Psychology | 2003

BREACH AND FULFILLMENT OF THE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTRACT: A COMPARISON OF TRADITIONAL AND EXPANDED VIEWS

Lisa Schurer Lambert; Jeffrey R. Edwards; Daniel M. Cable


Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes | 2009

Conceptualization and measurement of temporal focus: The subjective experience of the past, present, and future

Abbie J. Shipp; Jeffrey R. Edwards; Lisa Schurer Lambert


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2012

Forgotten but not gone: an examination of fit between leader consideration and initiating structure needed and received.

Lisa Schurer Lambert; Bennett J. Tepper; Jon C. Carr; Daniel T. Holt; Alex J. Barelka

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Jeffrey R. Edwards

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Adam W. Meade

North Carolina State University

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Alex J. Barelka

Wright-Patterson Air Force Base

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